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Simply and calmly ask your crush, "Would you like to go to the prom/dance with me? " If you're already scared by this step, tell yourself inwardly that you have twenty seconds of insane courage to do whatever you want and that it'll take one second of humiliation to get nineteen seconds of pride for your bravery.
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Materials | Student journals; Copies of the first chapter of "Pride and Prejudice", and the first pages of "To Kill a Mockingbird" or "The House on Mango Street" and "Bridget Jones's Diary" (Note to teacher: This last selection contains references to drinking and sex, so preview its content before sharing with students).
As a lifelong Anglophile, I have worshipped at the altar of Austen, Brontë, and Dickens ever since I received my first copy of Pride and Prejudice in the fourth grade.
The moment could define Mr. Von Essen and the strange world he has entered since Sept. 11: one in which every single minute is somehow stuffed with 90 seconds of grief, pride, rage and bewilderment.
The first 10 seconds of "Black Pride" opened with this off-kilter delayed piano and lead vocalist Caron Wheeler's sultry cry of "ah yeah" – suitably sweet and sour for a Hyperdub occasion.
Have students return to the first chapter of "Pride and Prejudice" with a pen in hand.
Ah yes, how about this signed first edition of Pride and Prejudice?
Between October 1796 and August 1797 Austen completed the first version of Pride and Prejudice, then called "First Impressions".
On the two-hundredth anniversary of "Pride and Prejudice," Paula Marantz Cohen reflects on why the book remains wildly popular.
Everyone remembers the first line of "Pride and Prejudice" — that "It is a truth universally acknowledged" business — but who recalls the last line of "Pride and Prejudice"?
Is the leather-bound cover designed to look like a first edition of Pride and Prejudice adorable or desperately twee?
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